Workers in labor unions have better access to high quality health insurance plans, better pensions, and higher wages leading to increased lifetime earnings likely leading to better health. Additionally, much of the gendered hiring, promotion, and wage discrimination faced by women in the workplace is dependent on social characteristics (marital status and/or their status as a mother). While many of the benefits associated with union membership can potentially buffer the gendered workplace inequalities that lead to poorer health outcomes, unions have been largely ignored in health disparities literature. Using 28 waves of data (N=3,409) from The National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979, this study creates a lifetime "union tenure" variable, tests its relationship to midlife physical and mental health, and tests ways in which motherhood and marital status may moderate this relationship. Findings suggest that long-term union membership is associated with better physical health among mothers but does not have a significant benefit for women without children. Further, in fully controlled models, this relationship is not dependent on marital status and both married and unmarried mothers see a union tenure health benefit. This study provides insight into how union membership may play a role in improving the midlife health of working mothers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23294965241262219 | DOI Listing |
Soc Curr
October 2024
Department of Sociology, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Heritage Hall 460, 1401 University Blvd., Birmingham, AL 35233.
Workers in labor unions have better access to high quality health insurance plans, better pensions, and higher wages leading to increased lifetime earnings likely leading to better health. Additionally, much of the gendered hiring, promotion, and wage discrimination faced by women in the workplace is dependent on social characteristics (marital status and/or their status as a mother). While many of the benefits associated with union membership can potentially buffer the gendered workplace inequalities that lead to poorer health outcomes, unions have been largely ignored in health disparities literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Med Dir Assoc
December 2024
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University, New York, NY, USA.
Objectives: Our study investigates unionization trends among direct care workers (DCWs) in the United States and examines the association between unionization and their wealth outcomes.
Design: This is a cross-sectional study using data from the Current Population Survey and Annual Social and Economic Supplement from 2009 to 2023.
Setting And Participants: Our study is based on US representative household surveys.
J Hand Surg Glob Online
November 2024
University of Kansas Medical Center, Department of Plastic, Burn, and Wound Surgery, Kansas City, KS.
Purpose: The Evidence-Based Practice Committee of the American Society for Surgery of the Hand set out to assess the membership's practice patterns (PPs) and familiarity with evidence-based principles for scaphoid fracture and nonunion management.
Methods: Using a consensus-generated 25-item online survey, all the American Society for Surgery of the Hand members were invited to participate via email in September 2023. Two question types were used including evidence-based practice (EBP) and PPs.
Soc Sci Med
December 2024
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
An emerging literature has documented a wide range of protections and benefits that union membership provides for health and wellbeing. However, this literature primarily focuses on point-in-time associations between unionization and health, whereas the theoretical benefits of union membership should accrue over a long period of time through such mechanisms as predictable upward attainment and greater employment security. Moreover, studies have not examined union membership's association with mortality, a core health outcome in medical research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuroinflammation
December 2024
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Blå Stråket 7, 413 45, Gothenburg, Sweden.
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